The 'great replacement theory' has been referenced by several white extremists before, including those responsible for the Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand and El Paso terror attack in Texas
Camus's book lays out the far-right conspiracy theory that non-white people are 'replacing' white people in Europe and the US.
Great replacement theorists also believe non-white people often deliberately have more children than white people in a bid to outnumber them. "There is, of course, no evidence to support this argument, but that hasn't impacted upon its longevity."Elements of replacement theory have origins in the US that stretch back to the Reconstruction Era of the 1800s.
The same survey found this was more likely among people who watch Fox News, One America News Network and Newsmax. "Like the vast majority of Americans, Republicans want to secure our borders and protect election integrity."
Canada Latest News, Canada Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Mitch McConnell says Payton Gendron was ‘deranged’ and disavows racism - follow live- BuffaloShooting - Mitch McConnell says Payton Gendron was ‘deranged’ and calls racism ‘abhorrent’ FOLLOW LIVE
Read more »
Inside the data that debunks the ‘Great Replacement’ theoryVersions of the conspiracy theory have existed for decades or even centuries – but the data doesn’t support the claims, writes Andrew Buncombe
Read more »
How the ‘Great Replacement Theory' Has Fueled Racist ViolenceThe man who opened fire in a Buffalo grocery store, killing 10 people, appears to have been motivated by a white nationalist ideology.
Read more »
Buffalo gunman ‘plotted attack for months’ | First ThingOnline posts apparently by 18-year-old suspect Payton Gendron show plans to livestream attack on Black people. Plus, who owns Einstein?
Read more »
How 4chan’s toxic culture helped radicalize Buffalo shooting suspectPeyton Gendron’s 180-page manifesto borrowed straight from the site’s politics boards, echoing antisemite and racist myths
Read more »